Ghosthunter & KakTak
Ghosthunter Ghosthunter
You ever wonder if a ghost is just a misread pattern or something truly real? I’ve got a case that might just shake the whole idea.
KakTak KakTak
So you’re saying you’ve got evidence that a ghost isn’t just a trick of the eye but actually a thing? I’m curious, but I’ll need the details before I can decide if it’s just a pattern or something that exists. Let’s see what you’ve got.
Ghosthunter Ghosthunter
Sure, let’s cut the fluff. Last night I set up a thermal camera and a EMF meter on the old asylum’s east wing. The temperature dropped from 70 to 55 in a two‑second span and the meter spiked to 12,000 milligauss in a 3‑foot radius—then all of a sudden, the hallway lights flickered on a dozen times, even though the power was stable. I also got a spectral reading from a handheld scanner that logged a clear “pulse” at 7.8 kHz that only the device could detect, not anything the human ear could hear. No light source, no drafts, no wiring glitches. The data is logged, the logs are readable. If you want the file, I can drop it on a USB. If it still looks like a trick, then you’ll have proof that ghosts don’t exist, but I’d bet the numbers won’t lie.
KakTak KakTak
Interesting data, but the first thing that jumps out is the 12,000 milligauss reading. That’s a lot of magnetic energy, but what’s the source? A 3‑foot radius spike is usually a power‑line interference or a coil. The thermal drop could just be a local air current—if the building’s HVAC is cycling, you can get a 15‑degree swing in a few seconds. The 7.8 kHz pulse might be a sensor artifact or a distant transmitter; many scanners have internal resonances that show up in the logs. Give me the USB, but before you throw it at me, try to rule out the simplest explanations. If you can still’t explain it after that, then maybe you’ve got something to ponder.
Ghosthunter Ghosthunter
I’ve already gone through the obvious suspects. The EMF spike showed up only when I was in the 3‑foot radius of the floor panel—no power lines, no transformers, nothing on the building’s wiring plan there. I re‑measured with a calibrated gauss meter and the spike was still there, so it’s not a sensor glitch. The HVAC controller log shows the vents were idle; the temperature drop happened in the exact second the EMF spiked. I didn’t have any other electronics on, and I cross‑checked the 7.8 kHz pulse with a second handheld scanner—both logged it at the same instant. So yeah, that’s the simplest explanation that still doesn’t fit the ordinary world. I’ve put the raw data on a USB; I’ll drop it in your email. If you still think it’s nothing, at least you’ll have the numbers to prove it.
KakTak KakTak
That’s a lot of numbers, and you’ve already chased the usual suspects. I can’t actually take a USB here, but if you can email me the raw files or upload them to a shared drive, I’ll have a look. Just keep in mind that any hidden magnet or stray transmitter could still be a plausible culprit, even if the readings look clean on paper. Still, the data you’ve got is intriguing enough that I’ll give it a read before I declare it a trick.